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Israeli Marine forces board the SV Rainbow Warrior at the military restricted area near the coal plant in Ashkelon, Israel. 14 Greenpeace activists were later arrested and taken into custody after protesting against the Rotenberg coal power plant construction.
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Our Captain, Daniel Rizotti, was arrested by Israeli police. The
officers, arriving on a military ship and carrying machine guns, came
on board and demanded that he sail back to Ashdod, the port we had left
that morning. So, still waiting for the release of our activists, we
sailed back.
The protest follows the Rainbow Warrior's 'Target CLimate Change' tour of New Zealand and marks the launch of the “Quit Coal: Save the Climate”
tour through the Mediterranean and Europe. Israel is only the beginning
of the journey; we’re visiting 11 countries en route to Poland,
where crucial UN climate negotiations continue this December.
Because, when it comes to climate change, coal is by far the worst
offender. Yet governments seem to be missing the message,
approving plans for hundreds of new coal-fired plants. If they
don’t wake up to the urgent need to stop this, then by 2030
carbon emissions coming from coal will have increased by some 60
percent. We’re here to sound the alarm.
Our action in Israel was a wake-up call to the government to abandon
its plans for a new coal plant in Ashkelon. Despite thousands of
Israelis voicing their opposition to this unnecessary and dirty plant,
the government has approved plans anyway. But it’s not too late! Greenpeace is urging all Israelis - whether at home or abroad - to lodge a complaint.